Veterans...Get the hell in here now!

raratt

Well-Known Member
RIP, Bob


Former senator Bob Dole almost didn't make it to his 22nd birthday, let alone past his 90th. More than 70 years ago while on active duty in the hills of Italy during World War II, he was hit by Nazi machine-gun fire.

Dole had joined the Army's Enlisted Reserve Corps in 1942 and soon became a second lieutenant in the 10th Mountain Division. On April 14, 1945, Dole's "I" Company of the 85th Regiment was attempting to take Hill 913 in their zone when they ran into intense enemy fire raking a clearing they had to cross. Dole threw a grenade at a machine-gun nest and dove into a shell hole.

In his 1988 autobiography he wrote, "I could see my platoon's radioman go down … After pulling his lifeless form into the foxhole, I scrambled back out again. As I did, I felt a sharp sting in my upper right back."

Although he left the Army as a captain, in 2019 Congress voted to promote him to Colonel in honor of his service.

In a 1998 campaign video Dole describes his wounding graphically: "Some high-explosive bullet entered my right shoulder, fractured my vertebrae in my neck. I — I saw these — things racing — my parents, my house. I couldn't move my arms, my legs." A medic gave the young lieutenant morphine, and then marked Dole's forehead with an "M" in his own blood. After nine hours on the battlefield before being evacuated to an Army field hospital, Dole was not expected to live.

Although Dole himself often makes light of his maimed right arm and his hospital stay, recalling his "bedpan promotion" to captain, in reality his recovery took him through several hospitals, nine operations, and over three years of rehabilitation and recuperation. He learned to write with his left hand and to rely on that arm, since his other cannot be used.

As one journalist pointed out during Dole's last presidential campaign, Dole neither exploits his disability nor shuns it. Rather, he has "folded it into his life" — through establishment of the Dole Foundation to help the disabled, by pushing the Americans With Disabilities Act through Congress, and by aligning himself with the physically impaired.

The Greatest Generation.
 

BarnBuster

Virtually Unknown Member

BarnBuster

Virtually Unknown Member
The pic looks like it's an early 1950's color pic; check the style of clothes and the cops uniform
"B-25 bomber planes at the North American Aviation, Inc., being hauled along an outdoor assembly line with an "International" tractor, in Kansas City, Kansas, in October, 1942" Photograph by Alfred Palmer

Search on Palmer's name , he's got quite a few photos of the North American and other Wartime plants.
 
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BarnBuster

Virtually Unknown Member
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An Afghan evacuee watches Air Force Senior Airman Stephen Crain smooth concrete onto a field at Task Force Holloman on Holloman Air Force Base, N.M., Dec. 2, 2021. Photo By: Army Spc. Ashleigh Maxwell

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A World War II veteran shows his French Legion of Honor medal during an event to mark the 80th anniversary of the attacks on Pearl Harbor and Oahu in Honolulu, Dec. 7, 2021. Photo By: Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class Aja Bleu Jackson

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Navy Lt. j.g. Elizabeth Hwang greets a World War II "Rosie the Riveter" upon her arrival at the Honolulu International Airport, Dec. 2, 2021, to attend events marking the 80th anniversary of the attacks on Pearl Harbor and Oahu. Photo By: Navy Petty Officer 3rd Class Molly Crawford
 

BarnBuster

Virtually Unknown Member
"It’s a shame that the 80th anniversary of the attack on Pearl Harbor received so little public attention. We are living in an era that holds some unpleasant resemblances to the period before the Japanese attack. And we are losing the capacity for surprise that could help us anticipate or avert a similar catastrophe in the future."


 

Hiphophippo

Well-Known Member
"It’s a shame that the 80th anniversary of the attack on Pearl Harbor received so little public attention. We are living in an era that holds some unpleasant resemblances to the period before the Japanese attack. And we are losing the capacity for surprise that could help us anticipate or avert a similar catastrophe in the future."


This is what I say about 9/11 kids today don’t understand the importance of our history and what we learn from it these are events that changed and defined the ways we live everyday today
 

BarnBuster

Virtually Unknown Member

His Silver Star Citation:
at last
 
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BarnBuster

Virtually Unknown Member
This is what I say about 9/11 kids today don’t understand the importance of our history and what we learn from it these are events that changed and defined the ways we live everyday today
When I was still working 15, 20 years ago (amongst the millennials of the day, many of them honor roll, merit grad's), I would ask them the significance of Dec 7, 1941 or the year 1776. Fully half or better had no clue.
 

Hiphophippo

Well-Known Member
When I was still working 15, 20 years ago (amongst the millennials of the day, many of them honor roll, merit grad's), I would ask them the significance of Dec 7, 1941 or the year 1776. Fully half or better had no clue.
Just a shame! when you forget your history it’s all bound to repeat itself and when I say repeat I mean the bad will repeat itself. we have to learn together and grow together as a nation and a world. I try to always explain the significance of our history to my children and wife for that part. If not our history and past what do we truly have
 
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BarnBuster

Virtually Unknown Member
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Retired Air Force Brig. Gen. Charles McGee, a Tuskegee Airman, comments on a Red Tail painting during a tour of the 99th Flying Training Squadron at Joint Base San Antonio-Randolph, Texas, Dec. 6, 2021
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McGee earned his wings and commission as a 2nd Lieutenant on June 30, 1943, part of class 43-F. Along with his fellow pilots, he was sent to Selfridge Army Airfield in Michigan to begin combat training. By December 22, the group departed for overseas service. By February 1944, McGee was stationed in Italy. During his time fighting in the European Theater, he conducted harbor and coastal patrols, strafed targets on the ground, protected bombers in the air on their dangerous missions, and performed fighter sweeps against German targets.

On August 24, 1944 during a mission to escort B-17s to Czechoslovakia, McGee and two other Tuskegee Airmen each shot down enemy aircraft. McGee’s aerial victory was a German Fw-190. During his time in World War II, he flew the Bell P-39Q Airacobra, Republic P-47D Thunderbolt and North American P-51 Mustang.

McGee returned stateside on December 1, 1944, having flown a total of 136 combat missions. He then became an instructor pilot for the North American B-25 Mitchell bomber for the 477th Bombardment Group – all black bomber pilots, navigators and bombardiers that were being prepared for war, but did not deploy before the end of conflict.

McGee remained on active duty 30 years. He became a command pilot with over 6,000 total flight hours, 1,151 of those in combat. He flew fighter aircraft combat tours in three major military conflicts, completing 409 combat missions for the Army Air Forces and the Air Force, one of the highest by any Air Force fighter pilot. He is the only known fighter pilot who flew 100 or more combat missions in each of the following wars: World War II, Korea and Vietnam.

He went on to command the 44th Fighter Bomber Squadron in the Philippines from 1951-53, the 7230thSupport Squadron in Italy from 1961-63, the 16th Training Squadron from 1967-68, and was the commander of the Richard-Gebaur Air Reserve Base in Missouri in 1972, the first black commander of a stateside Air Force Wing.

Upon his retirement from the United States Air Force on January 31, 1973, Colonel McGee amassed many awards for his service and valor. These include the Legion of Merit with Oak Leaf Cluster, Distinguished Flying Cross with two clusters, Bronze Star, Air Medal with 25 clusters, Army Commendation Medal, Air Force Commendation Medal with cluster, Presidential Unit Citation, Korean Presidential Unit Citation, the Hellenic Republic WWII Commemorative Medal, the French Legion of Honor, and several campaign and service ribbons. On March 29, 2007, at a ceremony inside the Rotunda of the U.S. Capitol, President George W. Bush and the U.S. Congress collectively awarded the Congressional Gold Medal to McGee and all other surviving and deceased Tuskegee Airmen. The Congressional Gold Medal is the nation's highest civilian award.

In 2011, he was inducted into the National Aviation Hall of Fame. In February 2020, was promoted from colonel to brigadier general.
 
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